Muscat Daily

UK firms urge PM to seek three year Brexit transition

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London, UK - British business leaders urged Prime Minister Theresa May to seek a three year transition­al period after Brexit, warning failure to secure more time would jeopardise ‘our collective prosperity’.

In a letter organised by the Confederat­ion of British Industry (CBI), executives from 120 businesses with more than one million employees again warned of a so-called cliff edge in which Britain leaves the European Union (EU) in March 2019 without a new trade deal or enough time for companies to adjust. Signatorie­s included representa­tives of Centrica Plc, Zurich Insurance Group Ltd, Johnson & Johnson and Harrods.

‘Our businesses need to make decisions now about investment and employment that will affect economic growth and jobs in the future’, according to the letter. ‘Continuing uncertaint­y will adversely affect communitie­s, employees, firms and our nations in the future’.

While May’s Cabinet seems to have struck an agreement to push for a transition, there remains disagreeme­nt over how long it should run. Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond has sided with business in sug- gesting three years, while others such as Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson and Trade Secretary Liam Fox are reported to favour a shorter timeframe.

May is set to update her Brexit strategy next Friday in a speech in Florence, Italy, days after Hammond recommende­d a ‘status quo’ transition.

‘Businesses are deeply concerned about Brexit and getting more so by the day’, Carolyn Fairbairn, the confederat­ion’s director general, wrote in a letter in The Sunday Times. ‘After three rounds of Brexit talks marked by hardball headlines and snail’space progress, the prospect of no deal in March 2019 feels all too real. The costs of this are serious’.

EU leaders have said they are open to discussing trade and a transition, but first want to resolve difference­s over citizens’ rights, a financial settlement and Ireland’s border. Only after ‘sufficient progress’ has been made on those topics are they willing to open trade talks, with doubts growing that the milestone will be reached in October as once hoped. In the UK, 40 per cent of firms are reducing or delaying investment in response to Brexit uncertaint­y, Fairbairn wrote, citing a CBI survey.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May
(AFP) Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May

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